EDITOR’S PROOF
342 J. Adams et al.
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ners from the two parties; for instance the pooled data in Fig.1 suggests that, on av-
erage, a Republican Congressperson from even a 70 percent Democratic district can
be expected to be more conservative than a Democratic member from a 30 percent
Democratic district. The difference in regression intercepts between Democrats and
Republicans indicates the typical difference between the DW-NOMINATE scores
of House members of the two major parties when the partisan composition of the
district is 50–50. As reported in Table1, these differences range from 0.52–0.57
DW-NOMINATE units in each of the first three subperiods to 0.72 units in the most
recent subperiod 1996–2004, reflecting the increased polarization in the House.^23
Clearly, party has a huge effect relative to that of district ideology.^24 Finally, the pos-
itive coefficient estimates on the South dummy variable suggest that—particularly in
the earlier time periods—representatives tended to compile more conservative leg-
islative voting records when they were elected from Southern districts, compared to
when they were elected from non-Southern districts with similar presidential voting
patterns.
So far we have considered what our data implies about House members’ re-
sponsiveness to district ideology, along with the ideological differences between
Democratic and Republican representatives. However our most interesting findings
concern how district ideology is related topartisan divergence, i.e., the degree of
ideological divergence between House members from different parties. As noted
above, the conventional wisdom is that partisan divergence will be greatest when
the election is not competitive, because in a lopsided district the candidate from the
dominant party can move away from either the national or district median and ex-
pect to win anyway. Given that districts with highly unequal partisanship are likely
to be less competitive in terms of presidential voting, this conventional wisdom im-
plies that we should observe the largest ideological gap between Republican and
Democratic representatives in districts that feature lopsided presidential vote mar-
gins.
However the curves in Fig.1, which are fitted to the full 1956–2004 data, do
not conform to this pattern: instead they bow out slightly away from each other in
the middle of the partisan distribution scale.^25 Note that neither for the full period
(1956–2004) nor for any of the five breakdown periods is there evidence that the
curve for either party is significantly bowedinwardat the 0.05 level. By contrast,
(^23) The partisan gaps reported above apply to the reference category, non-South. For the category
South, the estimated intercept and parameter estimate for the variable South must be combined, so
that the partisan gap in the South ranges from 0.32–0.33 in the first two subperiods to 0.69 in the
most recent subperiod.
(^24) We note that Ono ( 2005 ) obtains similar plots for two Congresses (1969–1970 and 2003–2004)
and observes the increasing polarization of the parties in Congress. Similarly, Clinton ( 2006 ), using
samples that aggregate to over 100,000 voters, finds systematic differences in Republican and
Democratic voting behavior in the 106th House (1999–2000) that cannot be entirely accounted for
by same-party constituency preferences.
(^25) Figure 4 in Butler ( 2009 ) appears to suggest this same convexity for Democrats and concavity
for Republicans.